Mars, Earth
Digest more
4h
The Hearty Soul on MSNA Mysterious Heartbeat is Coming From Earth's Core That Is Splitting Africa In TwoBeneath the Afar region's vast landscape in Ethiopia, scientists have discovered a powerful geological force that is reshaping the continent. A 35-mile-crack known as the Dabbahu fissure was discovered in 2005 in the Afar region.
7d
The Daily Galaxy on MSNScientists Uncover a Groundbreaking New Origin for Earth’s First ContinentsNew research has dramatically reshaped our understanding of Earth’s early geological history, overturning traditional beliefs about how the planet’s first continents came into being. Researchers from The University of Hong Kong (HKU) have published a study in Science Advances suggesting that deep mantle plumes,
A dusty envelope misplaced in a government archive has rewritten a chapter of mineral history. That 1949 letter, discovered during a 2023 digitization project in Bavaria, pointed curators toward a shoebox of lemon‑yellow fragments that had sat unnoticed for decades.
Researchers used zircons and AI to reconstruct Earth's ancient crust, revealing possible tectonic processes from the planet's earliest, rockless chapter. Researchers from the School of Earth Sciences at Zhejiang University,
Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago, during the geological eon known as the Hadean. The name "Hadean" comes from the Greek god of the underworld, reflecting the extreme heat that likely characterized the planet at the time.
Microbes have been discovered alive inside 2-billion-year-old rock, offering a rare window into Earth’s deep past. Found in the Bushveld Igneous Complex (BIC) of South Africa, these microscopic organisms have endured in isolation,
The origins of plate tectonics on Earth are hotly debated, but evidence from Australia now shows that parts of the crust moved in relation to each other as early as 3.5 billion years ago
Ever been late because you misread a clock? Sometimes, the "clocks" geologists use to date events can also be misread. Unraveling Earth's 4.5-billion-year history with rocks is tricky business.
North Sea's giant sand mounds that perplexed scientists up until now have been found to be younger, denser sands that sank into older, lighter "ooze."